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U.S. lifts cap on military aid to Philippines

Xinhua, January 22, 2015 Adjust font size:

The United States government has lifted the financial cap on military aid to the Philippines which was imposed five years ago, a senior Philippine official said on Thursday.

The Philippine Foreign Affairs Secretary Albert del Rosario told a media lunch reception that the U.S. lifted the cap sometime last year but the amount deducted in the past five years cannot be recovered.

Since 2009, the U.S. Congress had been enforcing a cutback of three million U.S. dollars worth of assistance to the country amid accusations of rights violations by the Armed Forces of the Philippines.

The U.S. lawmakers promised to lift the cap until the Philippine government met certain conditions related to solving and prosecuting cases of extrajudicial killings.

Visiting officials from U.S. Defense Department and State Department, who were in Manila this week for a bilateral dialogue with their Filipino counterparts, said the U.S. will be providing 40 million U.S. dollars in military financing to the Philippines in 2015.

David Shear, U.S. Defense Assistant Secretary for East Asia and Pacific, said the continued U.S. assistance is part of its commitment to support Philippine efforts to modernize its military.

"We want to do everything we can to help the Philippine side make the best use of assistance we provide," Shear said.

Local Philippine media speculated that the aid is deemed crucial to the government's current efforts in upgrading its military, perceived to be one of the region's weakest, in protecting its territorial sovereignty amid competing claims with China in resource-rich areas in the South China Sea. Endi